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The role of the primosome assembly and protein n' recognition site in replication of pBR322 plasmid was examined. The following evidence indicates that the primosome is involved in lagging-strand synthesis of pBR322 plasmid replication in vitro. Early replicative intermediates with newly synthesized leading strand, approximately 1 kilobase pair long, immediately downstream of the replication origin accumulate in products synthesized in extracts from a dnaT strain that lacks primosomal protein i or in wild-type extracts supplemented with anti-protein i antibody. These intermediates are converted efficiently into full-length DNA by addition of purified protein i. Consistent with the previously proposed role of the primosome (Arai, K. and Kornberg, A. (1981) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 78, 69-73), an n' site on the lagging strand, but not on the leading strand, is required for efficient replication of the plasmid in vitro. Plasmids lacking an n' site on the lagging strand replicate only to a limited extent in vitro and early replicative intermediates carrying nascent leading strands are accumulated, although a portion of the intermediates complete replication to yield full-length DNA. The latter reaction is completely inhibited by addition of anti-protein i antibody. Insertion of the n' site of phage phi X174 into pBR322 plasmids lacking lagging-strand n' sites restores the replicative ability of the mutant plasmid comparable to that of the wild-type plasmid. These results indicate that protein i is essential for lagging-strand synthesis of pBR322 plasmid in vitro and that it may play an important role in the priming events as a part of either an n' site-dependent primosome or an n' site-independent, as yet unidentified, priming complex.  相似文献   

3.
G Prelich  B Stillman 《Cell》1988,53(1):117-126
Proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) is a cell cycle and growth regulated protein required for replication of SV40 DNA in vitro. Its function was investigated by comparison of the replication products synthesized in its presence or absence. In the completely reconstituted replication system that contains PCNA, DNA synthesis initiates at the origin and proceeds bidirectionally on both leading and lagging strands around the template DNA to yield duplex, circular daughter molecules. In contrast, in the absence of PCNA, early replicative intermediates containing short nascent strands accumulate. Replication forks continue bidirectionally from the origin, but surprisingly, only lagging strand products are synthesized. Thus two stages of DNA synthesis have been defined, with the second stage requiring PCNA for coordinated leading and lagging strand synthesis at the replication fork. We suggest that during eukaryotic chromosome replication there is a switch to a PCNA-dependent elongation stage that requires two distinct DNA polymerases.  相似文献   

4.
The origin of replication of plasmid pT181 is nicked by the plasmid-encoded RepC protein. The free 3'-hydroxyl end at the nick is presumably used as primer for leading strand DNA synthesis. In vitro replication of pT181 was found to generate single-stranded DNA in addition to the supercoiled, double-stranded DNA. The single-stranded DNA was circular and corresponded to the pT181 leading strand. Recombinant plasmids were constructed that contain two pT181 origins of replication in either direct or inverted orientation. In vitro replication of the plasmid carrying two origins in direct orientation was shown to generate circular, single-stranded DNA that corresponded to initiation of replication at one origin sequence and termination at the other origin. These results demonstrate that the origin of pT181 leading strand DNA replication also serves as the site for termination of replication. Interestingly, the presence of two origins in inverted orientation resulted in initiation of replication at one origin and stalling of the replisome at the other origin. These results suggest that RepC can reinitiate replication at the second origin by nicking partially replicated, relaxed DNA. These data are consistent with the replication of pT181 by a rolling circle mechanism and indicate that single-stranded DNA is an intermediate in pT181 replication.  相似文献   

5.
Nascent polyoma DNA molecules were isolated after pulse-labeling of infected murine 3T6 cells with [3H]thymidine. The extent of digestion of these DNA molecules by spleen exonuclease was increased by exposure to alkali or RNase, suggesting that ribonucleotides were present at or near the 5' terminal of the newly synthesized pieces of DNA. Intermediates shorter than 300 nucleotides were hybridized to the separated strands of restriction enzyme fragments of the polyoma genome: 2.5 to 3-fold more radioactivity was found in the strand whose synthesis is necessarily discontinuous (the lagging strand) than in the strand whose synthesis is potentially continuous (the leading strand) than in the strand whose synthesis is potentially continuous (the leading strand). Separation of the strands of [5'-32P]DNA molecules showed that the excess [3H]thymidine in lagging-strand molecules was not simply the result of an increased number of molecules. Therefore, assuming equivalent efficiencies of labeling, lagging-strand pieces must be slightly longer than those with leading-strand polarity. The presence of ribonucleotides on the 5' termini of molecules with both leading- and lagging-strand polarity was demonstrated by (i) release of 32P-ribonucleoside diphosphates upon alkaline hydrolysis of [5'-32P]DNA separated according to replication polarity and (ii) the change in the degree of self-annealing of nascent molecules upon preferential degradation of DNA molecules possessing initiator RNA moieties by spleen exonuclease. We conclude that replication of polyoma DNA in vivo occurs discontinuously on both sides of the growing fork, using RNA as the major priming mechanism.  相似文献   

6.
The field of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication has been experiencing incredible progress in recent years, and yet little is certain about the mechanism(s) used by animal cells to replicate this plasmid-like genome. The long-standing strand-displacement model of mammalian mtDNA replication (for which single-stranded DNA intermediates are a hallmark) has been intensively challenged by a new set of data, which suggests that replication proceeds via coupled leading- and lagging-strand synthesis (resembling bacterial genome replication) and/or via long stretches of RNA intermediates laid on the mtDNA lagging-strand (the so called RITOLS). The set of proteins required for mtDNA replication is small and includes the catalytic and accessory subunits of DNA polymerase γ, the mtDNA helicase Twinkle, the mitochondrial single-stranded DNA-binding protein, and the mitochondrial RNA polymerase (which most likely functions as the mtDNA primase). Mutations in the genes coding for the first three proteins are associated with human diseases and premature aging, justifying the research interest in the genetic, biochemical and structural properties of the mtDNA replication machinery. Here we summarize these properties and discuss the current models of mtDNA replication in animal cells.  相似文献   

7.
Replication complexes were reconstituted using the eight purified bacteriophage T4 replication proteins and synthetic circular 70-, 120- or 240-nt DNA substrates annealed to a leading-strand primer. To differentiate leading strands from lagging strands, the circular parts of the substrates lacked dCMP; thus, no dCTP was required for leading-strand synthesis and no dGTP for lagging-strand synthesis. The size of the substrates was crucial, the longer substrates supporting much more DNA synthesis. Leading and lagging strands were synthesized in a coupled manner. Specifically targeting leading-strand synthesis by decreasing the concentration of dGTP decreased the rate of extension of leading strands. However, blocking lagging-strand synthesis by lowering the dCTP concentration, by omitting dCTP altogether, by adding ddCTP, or with a single abasic site had no immediate effect on the rate of extension of leading strands.  相似文献   

8.
Recent evidence suggests that coupled leading and lagging strand DNA synthesis operates in mammalian mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication, but the factors involved in lagging strand synthesis are largely uncharacterised. We investigated the effect of knockdown of the candidate proteins in cultured human cells under conditions where mtDNA appears to replicate chiefly via coupled leading and lagging strand DNA synthesis to restore the copy number of mtDNA to normal levels after transient mtDNA depletion. DNA ligase III knockdown attenuated the recovery of mtDNA copy number and appeared to cause single strand nicks in replicating mtDNA molecules, suggesting the involvement of DNA ligase III in Okazaki fragment ligation in human mitochondria. Knockdown of ribonuclease (RNase) H1 completely prevented the mtDNA copy number restoration, and replication intermediates with increased single strand nicks were readily observed. On the other hand, knockdown of neither flap endonuclease 1 (FEN1) nor DNA2 affected mtDNA replication. These findings imply that RNase H1 is indispensable for the progression of mtDNA synthesis through removing RNA primers from Okazaki fragments. In the nucleus, Okazaki fragments are ligated by DNA ligase I, and the RNase H2 is involved in Okazaki fragment processing. This study thus proposes that the mitochondrial replication system utilises distinct proteins, DNA ligase III and RNase H1, for Okazaki fragment maturation.  相似文献   

9.
Rolling-circle replication of bacterial plasmids.   总被引:24,自引:1,他引:23       下载免费PDF全文
Many bacterial plasmids replicate by a rolling-circle (RC) mechanism. Their replication properties have many similarities to as well as significant differences from those of single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) coliphages, which also replicate by an RC mechanism. Studies on a large number of RC plasmids have revealed that they fall into several families based on homology in their initiator proteins and leading-strand origins. The leading-strand origins contain distinct sequences that are required for binding and nicking by the Rep proteins. Leading-strand origins also contain domains that are required for the initiation and termination of replication. RC plasmids generate ssDNA intermediates during replication, since their lagging-strand synthesis does not usually initiate until the leading strand has been almost fully synthesized. The leading- and lagging-strand origins are distinct, and the displaced leading-strand DNA is converted to the double-stranded form by using solely the host proteins. The Rep proteins encoded by RC plasmids contain specific domains that are involved in their origin binding and nicking activities. The replication and copy number of RC plasmids, in general, are regulated at the level of synthesis of their Rep proteins, which are usually rate limiting for replication. Some RC Rep proteins are known to be inactivated after supporting one round of replication. A number of in vitro replication systems have been developed for RC plasmids and have provided insight into the mechanism of plasmid RC replication.  相似文献   

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12.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) encodes respiratory complex subunits essential to almost all eukaryotes; hence respiratory competence requires faithful duplication of this molecule. However, the mechanism(s) of its synthesis remain hotly debated. Here we have developed Caenorhabditis elegans as a convenient animal model for the study of metazoan mtDNA synthesis. We demonstrate that C. elegans mtDNA replicates exclusively by a phage-like mechanism, in which multimeric molecules are synthesized from a circular template. In contrast to previous mammalian studies, we found that mtDNA synthesis in the C. elegans gonad produces branched-circular lariat structures with multimeric DNA tails; we were able to detect multimers up to four mtDNA genome unit lengths. Further, we did not detect elongation from a displacement-loop or analogue of 7S DNA, suggesting a clear difference from human mtDNA in regard to the site(s) of replication initiation. We also identified cruciform mtDNA species that are sensitive to cleavage by the resolvase RusA; we suggest these four-way junctions may have a role in concatemer-to-monomer resolution. Overall these results indicate that mtDNA synthesis in C. elegans does not conform to any previously documented metazoan mtDNA replication mechanism, but instead are strongly suggestive of rolling circle replication, as employed by bacteriophages. As several components of the metazoan mitochondrial DNA replisome are likely phage-derived, these findings raise the possibility that the rolling circle mtDNA replication mechanism may be ancestral among metazoans.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Mechanism of plasmid pT181 DNA replication   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The origin of replication of plasmid pT181 is nicked by the plasmid-encoded RepC protein. This nick presumably serves as the start-site of pT181 replication by extension synthesis. In vitro replication of pT181 was found to generate single-stranded DNA in addition to the supercoiled, double-stranded DNA. The single-stranded DNA was circular and corresponded to the pT181 leading strand. In vitro replication of a recombinant plasmid carrying two pT181 origins in direct orientation was shown to generate circular, single-stranded DNA that corresponded to initiation of replication at one origin sequence and termination at the other origin. These results demonstrate that the origin of pT181 leading-strand DNA replication also serves as the site for termination of replication. Interestingly, the presence of two PT181 origins in inverted orientation resulted in initiation of replication at one origin and stalling of the replisome at the other origin. These data are consistent with the replication of pT181 by a rolling circle mechanism and indicate that single-stranded DNA is an intermediate in pT181 replication.  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the events occurring at the replication forks during DNA synthesis, we studied the replication of plasmid ColE1 DNA in vivo and in vitro, using strains of Escherichia coli carrying either the dnaG3(Ts) or dnaG308(Ts) mutation. Extracts of both mutant strains supported in vitro DNA synthesis, but the amount of [3H]TMP incorporated into DNA was always less for mutant extracts than for extracts of revertant strains, which were able to grow at 42 degrees C. Sucrose gradient analysis, Southern blot analysis, and electron microscopy showed that mutant extracts synthesize a large number of early replicative intermediates containing one or two (one on each template strand) fragments at the origin of replication and some completed molecules, either open circles or covalently closed circles. The revertant extracts synthesized more completed molecules although the fraction of templates used was about the same, 0.27 for mutant extracts and 0.21 for revertant extracts. Our results show that a mutation in dnaG causes a block in the synthesis of both leading and lagging strands after initiation, which results in the accumulation of early replicative intermediates. The average size of the newly replicated region in the early replicative intermediates is 730 bases as measured from electron micrographs of early replicative intermediates. We conclude that the DnaG protein functions in lagging strand synthesis and may be necessary for the continuation of leading strand synthesis as well.  相似文献   

16.
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Variation in the topology of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in eukaryotes evokes the question if differently structured DNAs are replicated by a common mechanism. RNA-primed DNA synthesis has been established as a mechanism for replicating the circular animal/mammalian mtDNA. In yeasts, circular mtDNA molecules were assumed to be templates for rolling circle DNA-replication. We recently showed that in Candida albicans, which has circular mapping mtDNA, recombination driven replication is a major mechanism for replicating a complex branched mtDNA network. Careful analyses of C. albicans-mtDNA did not reveal detectable amounts of circular DNA molecules. In the present study we addressed the question of how the unit sized linear mtDNA of Candida parapsilosis terminating at both ends with arrays of tandem repeats (mitochondrial telomeres) is replicated. Originally, we expected to find replication intermediates diagnostic of canonical bi-directional replication initiation at the centrally located bi-directional promoter region. However, we found that the linear mtDNA of Candida parapsilosis also employs recombination for replication initiation. The most striking findings were that the mitochondrial telomeres appear to be hot spots for recombination driven replication, and that stable RNA:DNA hybrids, with a potential role in mtDNA replication, are also present in the mtDNA preparations.  相似文献   

18.
The mechanism of mitochondrial DNA replication is a subject of intense debate. One model proposes a strand-asynchronous replication in which both strands of the circular genome are replicated semi-independently while the other model proposes both a bidirectional coupled leading- and lagging-strand synthesis mode and a unidirectional mode in which the lagging-strand is initially laid-down as RNA by an unknown mechanism (RITOLS mode). Both the strand-asynchronous and RITOLS model have in common a delayed synthesis of the DNA-lagging strand. Mitochondrial DNA is replicated by a limited set of proteins including DNA polymerase gamma (POLG) and the helicase Twinkle. Here, we report the effects of expression of various catalytically deficient mutants of POLG1 and Twinkle in human cell culture. Both groups of mutants reduced mitochondrial DNA copy number by severe replication stalling. However, the analysis showed that while induction of POLG1 mutants still displayed delayed lagging-strand synthesis, Twinkle-induced stalling resulted in maturated, essentially fully double-stranded DNA intermediates. In the latter case, limited inhibition of POLG with dideoxycytidine restored the delay between leading- and lagging-strand synthesis. The observed cause-effect relationship suggests that Twinkle-induced stalling increases lagging-strand initiation events and/or maturation mimicking conventional strand-coupled replication.  相似文献   

19.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) encodes for proteins required for oxidative phosphorylation, and mutations affecting the genome have been linked to a number of diseases as well as the natural ageing process in mammals. Human mtDNA is replicated by a molecular machinery that is distinct from the nuclear replisome, but there is still no consensus on the exact mode of mtDNA replication. We here demonstrate that the mitochondrial single-stranded DNA binding protein (mtSSB) directs origin specific initiation of mtDNA replication. MtSSB covers the parental heavy strand, which is displaced during mtDNA replication. MtSSB blocks primer synthesis on the displaced strand and restricts initiation of light-strand mtDNA synthesis to the specific origin of light-strand DNA synthesis (OriL). The in vivo occupancy profile of mtSSB displays a distinct pattern, with the highest levels of mtSSB close to the mitochondrial control region and with a gradual decline towards OriL. The pattern correlates with the replication products expected for the strand displacement mode of mtDNA synthesis, lending strong in vivo support for this debated model for mitochondrial DNA replication.  相似文献   

20.
The results presented here indicate that mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) synthesis occurs on the inner mitochondrial membrane and that a membrane-DNA complex, enriched in newly synthesized DNA, can be isolated. The complex is able to synthesize DNA in vitro. Enrichment studies demonstrated that mtDNA synthesis occurs on an intact membrane-DNA complex in vitro and that pulse-labeled mtDNA could be chased from the membrane-DNA complex to the top fraction of the discontinuous sucrose gradient. The membrane-DNA complex was also shown to carry out replicative synthesis of mtDNA in vitro. Replication was shown to be asynchronous with heavy-strand synthesis preceding light-strand synthesis. The progression of mtDNA replication by the membrane-DNA complex was shown to be from small fragments (<13 S) to larger fragments (14–24 S) liberated from closed circular molecules, to a heat-stable 27 S molecule, and finally to a 38 S heat-stable molecule. The time estimated to progress from small fragments to the 38 S molecule is 120 min.  相似文献   

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